Revving Up With Rice Refuse From China
by Adam W.
www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080526153329.htm
Chinese researchers are excited by the discovery that previously discarded parts of the rice plant that may lead to inexpensive biofuel.
Researchers in China are reporting a discovery that could turn rice straw into an inexpensive new renewable source of biofuel.
Their new study, scheduled for the July 16 issue of ACS' bimonthly journal Energy & Fuels, describes a way to boost production of biofuel from rice straw by almost 65 percent.
In the new study, Xiujin Li and colleagues point out that China is the world's largest rice producer, a crop that leaves behind about 230 million tons of rice straw each year. Rice straw is the stem and leaves left behind after harvesting the grains.
Scientists, however, have not tapped rice straw for production of biogas because bacteria cannot easily break down its cellulose due to the complex physical and chemical structures of lignocellulosic biomass.
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